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单词 repulsion
释义

repulsionn.

Brit. /rᵻˈpʌlʃn/, U.S. /rəˈpəlʃ(ə)n/, /riˈpəlʃ(ə)n/
Forms: late Middle English repulsioun, late Middle English– repulsion, 1500s repulsyon, 1500s repultion; also Scottish pre-1700 repulsioun.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French repulsion; Latin repulsion-, repulsio.
Etymology: < Middle French repulsion (French répulsion ) action of repelling (14th cent.), action of seeing someone off, or forcing someone back (1432; 19th cent. in sense ‘aversion, disgust’) and its etymon post-classical Latin repulsion-, repulsio action of rejecting, refutation (5th cent.), (in medical context) action of driving away or expelling (13th cent. in a British source) < classical Latin repuls- , past participial stem of repellere repel v. + -iō -ion suffix1. Compare repulse n., repulse v., repel v.
1. Repudiation of a wife by her husband; divorce. Cf. repudiation n. 1. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > marriage or wedlock > divorce or dissolution > [noun] > divorce of a wife
repulsionc1425
repudy?a1475
refusal1482
repudiation1530
dismissiona1616
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) v. 1537 (MED) Egistus..Of fals tresoun & newfongilnesse Þe kynges douȝter haþ outterly for-sake, And..dide a lybel make And forge a writ of repulsioun.
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1876) VI. 381 The qwene..takynge a libelle of repudy, of repulsion [L. accepto repudio], entrede a monastery.
2.
a. The action of forcing a person or thing back or away.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > defence > holding out or making stand > [noun] > repelling attack
repulsionc1460
repulse1548
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > causing to go away > [noun] > driving away > repelling
repulsionc1460
repulsing1490
repulse1578
repelling1611
staving1633
repellance1798
beating off1803
c1460 Tree & 12 Frutes (McClean) (1960) 89 (MED) For þogh oure lord here þe not anone, yit in such repulsioun he drawith þe to him ful lovingly.
1547 in Acts Privy Council (1890) II. 534 A violent and tumultuous repultion of the watchmen of the cittie, from and out of their said liberties.
1624 H. Wotton Elements Archit. 61 Then there is a repulsion of the Fume, by some higher Hill or Fabrique, that shall ouertoppe the Chimney.
1631 J. Mabbe tr. F. de Rojas Spanish Bawd vi. 75 Shee hath eyes which let flye darts of repulsion.
1736 W. Warburton Alliance Church & State iii. iii Evil which proceeds not from the will is called a mischief; and may be simply repelled; and this repulsion is called restraint.
1788 Trifler No. 19. 259 Whatever has tended to the repulsion of barbarity, and the improvement of civilization, is an object on which panegyric can never be exhausted.
1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India I. ii. vi. 256 The sacred lamp was lighted for the repulsion of evil spirits.
1820 A. Ranken Hist. France VII. i. ii. 80 The repulsion of the Spanish army under the Archduke Albert from Picardy.
1914 Jrnl. Royal Anthropol. Inst. 44 346 Another ceremony of mimetic repulsion of evil powers is the flea-driving ceremony.
1951 Condor 53 111 Exclusion of other males is usual among territorial birds, but aggressive repulsion of females and young by territorial males is unusual in sexually dimorphic species.
1989 tr. Voroshilov Lect. (U.S. National Defense Univ. Press) I. 48 Another short course taught in the second semester of the second year, addressed, among many other issues,..repulsion of enemy air attacks.
b. Medicine. The action of driving a morbid humour, eruption, etc., away or inwards from an affected part (cf. repel v. 1); an instance of this. Cf. repercussion n. 1a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > treatments removing or dispersing matter > [noun] > dispersing, etc., of humours or morbid matter
resolvinga1398
attractiona1400
resolutiona1400
repercussion?a1425
eduction?c1425
discussion1583
repulsion1583
epicrasis1592
derivation1600
expurgation1615
attractation1616
incision1626
diversion1656
dispersion1753
1583 P. Barrough Methode of Phisicke v. v. 215 The third is when the matter is thicke, and not pliable to repulsion.
1651 Hermeticall Banquet 57 Secondly by a repulsion it resists the flux of humors.
1725 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Wounds A Repulsion must be made in the beginning, that is, you must divert the Course of the Humours, and prevent their falling upon the Wound: Bleeding is the best Repulsion.
1773 T. Percival Ess. Med. & Exper. II. 214 Complaints, which had succeeded the sudden repulsion of an eruption on his foot, by means of an astringent bath.
1822 J. M. Good Study Med. IV. 560 There is also a greater tendency..to a sickness, or some other disorder of the stomach upon repulsion by cold.
1874 H. Hartshorne Conspectus Med. Sci. (ed. 2) 706 Exciting causes [of tubercular meningitis] are, blows or falls upon the head, exposure to the sun,..repulsion of eruptions upon the skin, suppression of accustomed discharges.
3.
a. Physics. The action of an object in repelling another by some physical force, typically by the action of an electric or magnetic field; the tendency of two objects to increase their separation. Also: an instance of this. Opposed to attraction n. 4d.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > mechanics > force > [noun] > repulsive
reaction1607
abaction1654
repulsiona1679
a1679 T. Hobbes Seven Philos. Probl. (1682) vii. 59 (heading) Problems of motion perpendicular, oblique; of pression and percussion; reflection and refraction; attraction and repulsion.
1725 N. Robinson New Theory of Physick Pref. 9 I have often thought all the several Principles of Philosophy might be comprehended under the two distinct Terms of Attraction and Repulsion.
1797 Encycl. Brit. XVI. 85/2 Repulsion, as well as attraction, has of late been considered as one of the primary qualities of all matter.
1824 Lancet 24 July 107/2 Repulsion..may be shewn by bringing bodies which have been similarly excited, or charged with electricity, near each other.
1830 J. F. W. Herschel Prelim. Disc. Study Nat. Philos. 297 The production of motion by the mutual attractions and repulsions of distant or contiguous masses.
1850 C. G. B. Daubeny Introd. Atomic Theory (ed. 2) iv. 125 The force of repulsion..tends to keep the particles of an aëriform fluid at a certain distance apart.
1924 E. Rutherford in Sci. Monthly Dec. 574 The forces of attraction and repulsion must balance at a certain distance from the nucleus.
1951 I. Asimov Foundation Trilogy—Foundation i. iii. 10 The elevator was of the new sort that ran by gravitic repulsion.
1964 L. H. Van Vlack Elements Materials Sci. (ed. 2) ii. 36 (caption) Downward force on upper ring is caused by gravity. Upward force is caused by magnetic repulsion.
2004 B. Greene Fabric of Cosmos x. 278 The gravitational repulsion of the cosmological constant's negative pressure overwhelms the gravitational attraction coming from its positive energy.
b. In extended use: tendency to separate, or to introduce division, difference, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > separation > action of dividing or divided condition > [noun]
partinga1382
distinctiona1387
partition1517
quartering1555
distincting1570
distinguishing1587
dividedness1656
scission1676
dismembering1677
dismemberment1727
splitting1737
repulsion1771
dipartition1838
splitting1847
piecemealing1853
diaeresis1856
fission1865
split-up1878
1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker I. 167 They..sat in a state of mutual repulsion, like so many particles of vapour, each surrounded by its own electrified atmosphere.
1843 W. E. Gladstone in Foreign & Colonial Q. Rev. Oct. 590 Where their influence..is necessarily at an end.., nay rather, where it is converted into a force of absolute, of most powerful repulsion.
1876 T. Le M. Douse Grimm's Law 78 What we are here concerned with is the process of ethnic and linguistic repulsion.
1963 F. L. K. Hsu Clan, Caste, & Club vi. 129 Repulsion refers to the fact that the ‘different groups of which the society is composed, repel each other rather than attract’.
1984 G. W. Barrax Deaths of Animals & Lesser Gods II. 36 It holds together The mutual repulsion of its components And what church has ever done that?
2002 Times (Nexis) 8 Feb. When God wanted to create two elements..whose mutual repulsion would be violent, instantaneous and permanent, He invented Dennis Skinner and Oliver Letwin.
c. Genetics. The condition of two genes, in an individual heterozygous at each of two linked loci, when the dominant allele of one occurs on the same chromosome as the recessive allele of the other, so that the dominant alleles tend not to co-occur in gametes. Opposed to linkage n. b (cf. coupling n. 6e).
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > biological processes > genetic activity > [noun] > changes or actions of genes or chromosomes
repulsion1908
polymery1914
hypostasis1917
inversion1921
polymerism1923
interchange1927
position change1937
heterochromatization1941
read-through1969
1908 R. C. Punnett & W. Bateson in Science 15 May 786/1 When in F1 the two dominants..coexist, there is a repulsion between them, such that each gamete takes one or other of these two factors, not both. Such mutual repulsion of two dominants has already been shown to occur in the sweet pea.
1926 Encycl. Brit. II. 162/2 It is sometimes convenient to distinguish the case in which the two dominants (AB × ab) are introduced together by the parent as coupling and the converse (Ab × aB) as repulsion.
1977 K. Mather & J. Jinks Introd. Biometrical Genetics viii. 203 The associated distribution will lead to coupling linkage in F1 and so may be denoted by C, while the dispersed distribution will give repulsion linkage and so may be denoted by R.
1999 Gene 235 32/1 When the dominant allele for one locus appears in a chromosome with the recessive allele for the other locus, the alleles are said to be in repulsion.
4. A feeling of intense disgust; dislike, aversion, repugnance; (also occasionally) an instance of this.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > hatred > loathing or detestation > [noun]
wlatingc725
wlatc960
ugginga1325
uglinessc1325
loathingc1340
abominationc1350
wlatsomenessc1380
wlatingness1382
fastidie?a1425
loathsomenessc1425
ugsomenessc1450
horribility1496
detestation1526
abhorring1528
dislikingc1540
fastidiousness1541
abhorfulness1556
fulsomeness1563
execration1570
abhorment1576
detesting1591
loath?1591
abhorrence1592
abhorrency1596
dislike1597
distaste1598
disgust1611
nausea1619
oppositeness1619
nauseousness1622
detest1638
wearisomeness1642
repugnance1643
odium1645
abhorrition1649
abominate1651
nausity1654
disdain1655
repugnancy1681
degoust1716
repulsion1751
self-repugnance1852
kick1893
1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 160. ⁋5 There are many natures which..seem to start back from each other by some invincible repulsion.
1799 T. S. Whalley Castle Montval iii. ii. 40 No wonder that my friend, so pure herself, Should feel repulsion at the wretch's presence.
1847 R. W. Emerson Poems 17 If Love his moment overstay, Hatred's swift repulsions play.
1863 ‘G. Eliot’ Romola I. xv. 255 There was an unconquerable repulsion for her in that monkish aspect.
1871 B. Taylor tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust II. iii. 210 Strong repulsion written on thy brow I see.
1931 E. Ferber Amer. Beauty xi. 229 ‘Pfft!’ He spat, to express his repulsion.
1958 S. Plath Jrnl. 8 Mar. (2000) 347 Ted does not like Arvin: I sense an acrid repulsion between the two men.
1996 C. J. Stone Fierce Dancing xv. 232 The voice made me shiver with repulsion, as if I'd just trodden on a snail.

Compounds

repulsion motor n. Electrical Engineering a type of electric motor for single-phase alternating current operation, formerly used as a traction motor in electric trains.Current is supplied to the stator only, the armature being short-circuited through the brushes and its current induced from the stator winding.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > machines which impart power > motor > [noun] > electric
electromotor1879
electric locomotive1880
shunt motor1883
shunt machine1888
repulsion motor1891
rotary converter1891
induction motor1897
traction motor1900
selsyn1926
torque motor1926
synchro1943
magslip1947
1891 Electr. Engineer 6 Nov. 445/2 We have..a scheme based upon the repulsion motor principle of Elihu Thomson.
1920 Whittaker's Electr. Engineer's Pocket-bk. (ed. 4) 229 The repulsion motor is the simplest and commonest of all a.c. commutator motors.
2003 D. R. Tomal & N. S. Widmer Electronic Troubleshooting (ed. 3) iii. 67 The repulsion motor has excellent starting torque and variable speed control characteristics.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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